Although fundraising efforts have seen success over the last three years, Keith A. Grossman, Time president and New York Cares board member, told CoinDesk heâs not only passionate about raising money for underprivileged students, but also about implementing technologies to propel a new wave of philanthropic efforts.
âIn Web3, there is a desire and an intent for people to show that the space has tremendous good in it. Doing something like this is the best example to highlight the good,â said Grossman.
The collection will feature over 16,000 digital pieces created by Open AIâs DALL-E. Each artificial intelligence-generated piece is inspired by differentWinston Churchillquotes that are interpreted in the style of 13 artists including Andy Warhol, Frida Kahlo and Jean-Michel Basquiat.
Individuals who previously signed up forGrossmanâs âAbout Nothingâ allow list can now mint digital artworks that are priced at 0.05 ETH (about $65) each. The site will be open to the public on Friday at midnight ET, and will close Sunday at noon.
Additionally, users who mint over five NFTs will receive a digital piece from artist Pablo StanleyâsHumankindcollection, and those who mint more than 10 will receive a digital collectible fromMicah Johnson, the artist behind the Aku World NFT collection.
All of the proceeds from the first and secondary sales will go towards bolstering academic programs, providing school supplies and enrichment programs throughout New York City.
New York City Department of Education Chancellor David C. Banks said in a press release that he is ready to embrace new technology to uplift over 1 million students across the roughly 2,000 schools he oversees.
âTo ensure a bright future for our young people, we must collaboratively take a technologically driven approach to supporting our schools and our young people,â said Banks.